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Fengshu Liu, Urban Youth in China:
Modernity, the Internet and the
Self
Introduction
1. Social Transformation in China (1979-2010)
2. The Internet with Chinese Characteristics
3. Paradoxes as Lived Experiences of Modernization: Urban Youth
with Chinese Characteristics
4. The Internet in the Everyday Lifeworld: ‘I-and-the-Internet’
Narratives from Members of China’s ‘Net-Generation’
5. The Internet Anxiety, the Norm of the ‘Good’ Netizen and the
Construction of the ‘Proper’ Wired Self
6. Between Demonization and Celebration: Chinese Urban Youth and
the Net Café
7. The Balinghou’s Collective Narrative in an Online Forum
8. From Political Indifference to Vehement Nationalism: Chinese
Young People Negotiating the Political Self in the Internet
Age.
Conclusion: Modernity, the Internet and the Self.
Paola Voci, China on Video: Smaller-Screen Realities (Routledge 2010)
1. Smaller-Screen Realities
2. Building Bridges: From Silver Screens to Smaller-Screen
Realities
3. Animations
4. Portable Movies: Cellflix
5. Egao Movies: Wicked Fun, Participatory Culture and
Enlightenment
6. Light Political Documentaries
7. Lightened (Up) Subaltern Smaller-Screens
8. Smaller-Screens: Film Spaces and Theories
9. An Afterword on Lightness: Quasi-Conclusion
David Kurt Herold and Peter Marolt, eds., Online Society in China: Creating, celebrating, and instrumentalising the online carnival。 Routledge, 2011.
Introduction: Noise, Spectacle, Politics – Carnival in Chinese
Cyberspace - David Kurt Herold
Part I – Creating
the Carnival – Netizens and the State
1.
Cultural Convulsions – Examining the Chineseness of Cyber China -
Wai-chi, Rodney Chu and Chung-tai Cheng
2. The
Internet Police in China: Regulation, Scope and Myths - Xiaoyan
Chen and Peng Hwa Ang
3. Grassroots agency in a civil
sphere? Re-thinking Internet Control in China - Peter
Marolt
Part II –
Celebrating the Carnival – Fun, Freak-shows, and
Masquerades
4. Parody and resistance on the
Chinese Internet - Hongmei Li
5. China's many
Internets: Participation and digital game play across a changing
technology landscape - Silvia Lindtner and Marcella
Szablewicz
6. Lost in virtual carnival and masquerade:
In-game marriage on the Chinese Internet - Weihua Wu and Xiying
Wang
PART III –
Instrumentalising the Carnival – Rioting as
Activism
7. Human Flesh Search Engines:
Carnivalesque Riots as components of a 'Chinese Democracy' -
David Kurt Herold
8. In search for motivations:
Exploring a Chinese Linux user group - Matteo
Tarantino
9. Identity vs. anonymity: Chinese netizens
and questions of identifiability - Kenneth Farrall and David
Kurt Herold
10. Taking urban conservation online:
Chinese civic action groups and the Internet - Nicolai
Volland
Conclusion: Netizens and Citizens, Cyberspace
and Modern China - David Kurt Herold
Helen Sun, Internet Policy in China: A Field Study of Internet Cafes, Lexington Books, 2010.
INTRODUCTION
PART I: ISSUES AT THE MACRO LEVEL
1 Techno-Socio Relationships
2 The Evolution of Statism in China
3 Media Development and Communication Policy
4 The State's Political Response to Internet Technology
PART II: ISSUES AT THE MICRO LEVEL
5 Theories about the Public Sphere and the Regulability of
Cyberspace
6 Internet Cafes and Their Environment
7 Net Bar Visitors and Their Reaction to Regulation
8 Net Bar Owners and Their Interaction with the State
CONCLUSION
Lagerkvist Johan, After the Internet, Before Democracy. (Peter Lang, 2010)
Internet regulation and the
youth/subaltern norm
In blogs they trust?
And the baton passes to ... citizen journalism
Weapons of harmony and irony
Old propaganda becomes ideotainment
A nationalistic information sphere
The Google mirage: global business norms versus Internet
sovereignty
Norms endgame and breakthrough.
Simon Shen and Shaun Breslin, eds., Online Chinese Nationalism and China's Bilateral Relations (Lexington Books, 2010)
Introduction
1.
When China Plugged In: Structural Origins of Online Chinese
Nationalism Simon Shen
and Shaun Breslin
2. Nationalism-on-demand?
When Chinese Sovereignty Goes Online Sow Keat Tok
The First Layer: Japan, Taiwan and the USA
3.
China's Online Nationalism towards Japan James Reilly
4.Networking Anti-Japanese
Protests: Popular Sovereignty Reasserted since 2005
Shih-diing Liu
5. Alternative Online
Chinese Nationalism: Response to the Anti-Japanese Campaign in
China on Hong Kong's Internet Simon Shen
6. Ethnocentric Perceptive
Re-explored: Online Chinese Nationalism toward Taiwan Benson
Wai-kwok Wong
7. The "Two Americas"
Dichotomy: Online Chinese Nationalism towards the United States of
America Yaling Pan
The Second Layer: The Rests of the World
8.
Beyond Sino-ASEAN Relations: Online Chinese Nationalism towards
Southeast Asia Chun
Zhang
9. Online Chinese
Nationalism toward the European Union: Economic and Diplomatic
Implications of the Olympic Torch Relay Protests
10. Online Nationalism and
Sino-UK Relations Chun-wing Lee
11. A constructed
(un)reality on China's re-entry into Africa: the Chinese online
community perception of Africa Simon Shen
12.Discussions on
Sino-Latin American Relations at Qiangguo Forums (or the Lack
Thereof) Kai-chi Leung
Conclusion
13. Online Chinese
nationalism(s): Comparisons and Findings
Shaun Breslin and Simon Shen
Cynthia Brokaw and Christopher A. Reed eds., From Woodblocks to the Internet: Chinese Publishing and Print Culture in Transition, Circa 1800 to 2008 (Sinica Leidensia) (Brill, 2010).
本书目录暂缺,其中涉及互联网的有三篇文章,一篇论新文学,讲到卫惠、棉棉和木子美,作者 Daria Berg;一篇论网络文学,拙作;最后一篇论网络管制,作者Gudrun Wacker。
Susan L. Shirk, Changing Media, Changing China (Oxford University Press, 2010)
Introduction, Susan L. Shirk
1. China's Emerging Public Sphere, Qian Gang and David
Bandurski
2. The Rise of the Business Media in China, Hu
Shuli
3. Struggling Between Propaganda and Commercials, Miao
Di
4. Environmental Journalism in China, Zhan Jiang
5. The Engineers of Human Souls, Tai Ming Cheung
6. Changing Media, Changing Courts?, Benjamin
Liebman
7. What Kind of Information Does the Public Demand?, Daniela
Stockmann
8. The Rise of Online Public Opinion and its Political Impact,
Xiao Qiang
9. Changing Media, Changing Foreign Policy in China,Susan L.
Shirk




